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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 11

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

11 BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1936 summoned Police Emergency Squad to control a crowd of several hun- Judge Outsmarts 4,000 Stores Labor's Supporters! rrom tne mmuum Ave. station i area persons. Deaf Talesman Eleven of the 32 men summoned World's Fah-Looks to Youth For Buildings to County Court for duty on the September grand Jury asked Judge John J. Fitzgerald to excuse them. Of Roosevelt Err, Thomas Declares Lenike, Not Landon, Is Fascist Threat, Says Socialists' Candidate Shakespeare Soused Still, Says Medium Bard of Avon Has Been Lit Up Ever Since He Reached Astral Plane, Declares Woman Conducting Seance By o.

K. PILAT One said he was deaf. The Judge looked down at him from the bench and in a low voice asked: DBees and wIB'sM How long have you been hard Competition Opened to of hearing?" A little more than a year." wai Get Ifjns of 'Unknown' Architects the answer. Why, you can hear better than I can," the Judge retorted with a tri Old Man Noah knew a thing or two, but he never dreamed he was a woman. He might have learned something from attending the umphant smile.

Judge Fitzerald himself Is somewhat deaf and uses a mechanical contrivance to aid his Labor leaders who have served notice that they Intend to play so-called practical politics this year and go along with President Roosevelt are making a grave error, Norman Thomas, Socialist nominee for President, told some 2,000 persons last night at the Manhattan Opera House. Speaking on "The Socialist Party and Labor's Non-Partisan League," Mr. Thomas warned that William Lemke, Union party entry for Presi hearing. He pressed another man into service to make up the necessary 23 seance given last night by Elizabeth (Elizabeth the Tran scrlber) O'Hare, at her home 1230 79th which was at- n. i ior a grand jury.

Aid City Fight For lLCt. Milk 6,000 Firms in Boro to Join Campaign lo Keep Price Down The list of retail stores selling milk at 11 cents a quart mounted to more than 4,000 today as the city admin-lstraWsn, brushing aside charges that It is abetting cheating by Independent companies, pressed its low-priced milk drive with increased determination. The administration's campaign was given impetus with an announcement from Aaron H. Kaufman, counsel for the Retail Grocers Council of Brooklyn, that the 6,000 storekeepers lined up with that organization would maintain the 11-cent milk price. He said the list of the stores would be turned over to Dr.

John L. Rice, Health Commissioner, for the Information of consumers. Dr. Rice said there was a surplus supply of milk available and ordered discontinuance of the use of private trucks for distributing milk to stores selling at the 11-cent figure. Milk for Babies First The commissioner declared that his principal concern was obtaining all the milk necessary for babies of su jonn Law Asks $1,812,297 To Graduate 92 dent, and his backers constitute a real Fascist threat to this country, In Gym Tonight More for Colleges Budget Director Leo J.

McDer- He ridiculed the Communist contention that Alfred M. Landon Is a Fascist leader, declaring that such a statement is "as dangerous as it A telephone repairman set out to fix some trouble in a junction box the point at which telephone wires leading to sub-scribcrs' premises are joined up with the cable to the central office. He found the box full of bees. He and his foreman consulted the Classified Telephone Directory under Locating a bee man, they telephoned him and told him of their trouble. Under his expert direction, the bees were coaxed into a container and removed.

You'd expect a telephone man to think of the "Classified" when he got into difficulties. It was a case of the doctor taking his own medicine. And we suggest that you, too, remember the Classified Telephone Directory in your difficulties. It is an important link in the service that helps you reach anybody, anywhere, any time. New York Telephone (Company.

The "unknown' and younger element In the architectural world are to be given an opportunity to pit their talents against outstanding figures In the profession through a sketch competition arranged by the 1939 Worlds Pair Corporation calling for submission of designs of Individual buildings for the tion. The contest, announced today, has as its main objective the recruiting of the best brains in the field of architecture in an effort to provide buildings for the fair with an "imaginative and festive quality." The American Institute of Architects is actively supporting the competition. Seek New Talent Grover A. Whalen, president of the fair corporation, In announcing details of the contest, said "We hope and expect to discover much valuable latent talent. It is the intention of the fair corporation to enlist the best minds In the architectural profession and we are particularly anxious to give some of the younger and unknown elements the chance to help produce a fair that will set a new mark in architecture.

We feel it entirely possible that the type of structures developed through Rev. Dr. E. J. Walsh to Give Address at Exercises Is Inaccurate.

mott had under consideration today the request from the Board of Higher Education for a $1,812,297 Increase next year in the appropria 'I have already said that Landon, tended by a number of skeptics, including Joseph Dunnlnger, magician, who is president of the Universal Council for Psychic Research, and who has offered $10,000 to anybody producing psychical phenomena which he cannot duplicate by natural means. Mrs. O'Hare, a granite faced woman In white with bobbed gray hair, went into a trance, with hands over her eyes, and spoke as the representative of such spirits as King Tut, Nancy Titterton and Arthur Conan Doyle. She revealed that: Shakespeare got so drunk when he reached the astral plane that he still is in a stupor. Aristotle is reincarnated on this earth as Arthur Brisbane.

Dunnlnger was in a former life an or the Interests behind him which Dean to Hand Degrees tion for the three city colleges. In dications were that the city admin are stronger than Landon, are in the strict sense of the word, reactionary," he declared. "They want istration would contend that it Is Impossible to grant the rise. to go back to an older capitalism. Brooklyn College asked for They want Coolidge, not Hitler.

To day they do not think they will 346.217, an Increase of $669,220. City College requested $3,470,107, a rise of $581,011. Hunter College asked for have to accept the collectivism and regimentation of a Hitler or a Mus $2,548,544, an Increase of $446,174. solinl. They may secretly aid Lemke The Increases were held neces needy families.

The milk Is sold for to beat Roosevelt, but they laugh at or hate his program. 8 cents a quart at baby health sta tions. "Lemke may be to some extent a sary to meet mandatory salary rises, to make necessary additions to the staffs of teachers and for expansion purposes to provide for swelling en St. John's University School of Law will graduate 92 students at exercises lh the university gymnasium tonight. All except one of this number receive the Bachelor of Laws degree, the exception being a candidate for a certificate of attendance.

Irving J. Blacker, Cum Laude degree winner, is valedictorian and Philonomic Council Award winner. The Rev. Dr. Edward J.

Walsh, university president, will make the address Dr. George Matheson, dean, will present the degrees. The candidates for degrees include: Bachelor of Laws Bernard Bereman Bernard Relin 8amuel W. Bernstein Louis L. Roos Irviiw J.

Blacker Moe Rosenzweig Frank P. Broz Edward I. Schneider Joseph M. Calderon Helen 8htelr Murray J. Chlkofskv Ralnh Sllverstein 'Hearst puppet' or a 'Landon but that does not explain his movement, or his backers, the rollment.

Messianic demagogues, Coughlin FIRE RUINS JUNK SHOP Fire gutted a two-story brick building at 410 3d Ave. at 3:55 a.m. today. A Junk shop on the ground floor was owned by Angelo Carrlzzo, living in the building. Firemen Smith and Townsend.

They are or even like Hearst, who wants above all to protect his $220,000,000 for tune. true Fascist forerunners. Dr. Town-send less so than his clerical rivals. But how will we get the people to understand that fact if we call Landon a Fascist? The Fascist demagogue begins by a radical middle class appeal, not by talking like a Indian fakir and in a future life will be a Jewish Messiah.

'Self-Hypnosis' Just after this final revelation Dunnlnger passed a note from hand to hand, reading: "This is a case of self-hypnosis. The woman is sincere. I am going to suggest to her that Noah was really a woman." At the moment the ghost speaking, and using Mrs. O'Hare's regular tones, because as the medium explained her vocal chords were strained, was again Arthur Conan Doyle. Dunnlnger asked: "Sir Arthilr, do you know anything special about Noah?" 'Noah Woman and Fake' George Singer Landon, Knox, Liberty League, the sketch competition will form the starting point of a new era In 4 building." The contest will be open to all architects registered under the New York State law and residing or maintaining an office in New York City, Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester or Rockland Counties In this State, and Essex, Hudson or Bergen Counties in New Jersey.

There will be $4,250 in prizes, the first prize winner to receive $1,000 and commjs- I sion to design at least one building to be constructed on the exposition I grounds. Winners of the other prizes will be eligible for assignment as architects on a fee basis for particular buildings, groups, facades ang approaches. HOSTS AT SPRING LAKE Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Murphy of 8th Ave.

gave a cocktail party in honor of Mrs. Eugene McArdle of 2d St. at the Warren Hotel, Spring Lake, N. recently. Among the NGTH SUADAY, SEPTEMBER 13 ohm mi ATLANTIC CITY 075 "Noah was a fake," retorted the medium, going on to say, "Do not think of me as a progressed soul.

Somebody asked Conan Doyle if he approved his son's recent marriage. "I have nothing to say, I cannot 5.r M7 1U OUHDTlir vera A. Clarke Nlckolas Cottrell John H. Denton Leo Deutsch Robert M. Donohua Jerome H.

Doran John A. Flerro Rubin H. Frank Felix F. Fusco James P. Fusscas Seymour Oendal Ella M.

Oiancola Aaron Goldman Christopher J. Gorman Daniel Orodr Philip Handelsman James C. Healer Raymond C. Hitzel John F. Hummel Abraham Keslansky Samuel C.

Klein Howard A. Kochen- dorfer Joseph P. Kopelman Evalynne 8. Korod- sky Charles T. La Bella Samuel 8.

Ladin Mark K. Leeds Michael Lekacos Leonard J. Linden- baum Arthur McCauley John J. McManus Daniel A. Muccla Aaron Sofer Bender Solomon Jacob Storch Manfred Stutzel Maurice H.

Sussman Paul Taubman G. Stuart Thatford Milton Welssman Theodore Barr Anthony 8. E. Bono John J. Broderick William J.

Cahlll Jr. James E. Clair Gerald V. Clarke Irene B. Cohen George N.

Doddate) 81dney Ellenboeen Frank J. Gallagher Charles J. Garbarinl Adolph H. Glattjtein Bernard Goodwin Helen G. Herzog Leonard Hoffman Rhoda Karten William J.

Keogh Anthony Llbemky Joseph F. Longobardl Morris Mann Nathan Matzken August J. Mick Arthur Nash James W. O'Connor Walter W. Padwe Frederick B.

Power Seymour C. Rattner Also le-Dav TiCKiTt, ITloe aale dally). 123 ASBURY PARK LONG BRANCH. JERKY 9 CACHES, From down- lOUMDTtir town ana iewars; si.au irom Penn Sta. EVERY SUNDAY.

FIVB MORNING TRAINS, two expremes. Lv. Penn. Mt. .15.

7:40, 7:46. "8:20. M. A M. Newark 16 minutes later.

Also Wednesday. Sept. 28, twe morning trains. First stop Long'Braneh. STANDARD TIME Add one hour lei Daylldlit Time.

New York. Penn. 6-SMO Newark, Market 2-sfiOO Newark City Ticket Office, 10 Commenw M. Influence mortals, he married her and he will live with her "Was Noah a man?" pressed Dunnlnger. "No, there was no such person.

Noah was a woman." 25 Billion Years Old The last sentence came out as though involuntarily, and the medium shook her head before going on to discuss various spooks, or earth-bound-spirits, and to mention that all the persons In the room were 25 billion years old. guests were Dr. John Lamane, Dr. and Mrs. Bert Sweeney, Miss Josephine Sweeney, Mr.

and Mrs. Carl Strers, Mr. and Mrs. J. Rice, Miss Helen Donovan, Mrs.

James Costi-gan and Miss Katherlne Murphy. Among those who attended the national championship tennis matches at Forest Hills on Monday were Lawrence Bennett and Cyril Porter and the Misses Ruth and Helen McKenna. Pasquale Palumbo Wilfred V. Reape Hermann Perlmutter Philip N. Ritholts Benjamin persnan Bam singer Damien D.

Pretto Francis A. Wandell Wallace Prints Irving Perelstein Certificate of Attendance Michael N. Rudack of the dab r4 with smart HALF-HITE HEELS EST. 1851 Black, Fall's dark -horse winner. Luxuriously soft suede touched with glamorous patent.

All with Half-hitc Heels. smart new level for comfortable living. High enough to give you poise and a graceful calf-line. Low enough for all-day walking without a wobble. I 9 At Av POINSETTIA This is the largest savings bank in Brooklyn fourth largest in the United States.

There is- no saier place for your reserve funds. It has thrived under nineteen U. S. Presidents in good times and bad through four wars and several depressions. Every cent of our depositors' savings has always been available on demand, and dividends (interest) have been paid regularly every year, for 85 years.

i The management of the bank is strictly controlled by N.Y. State regulations. Its guiding principle is and always has been "Safety First for Depositors' Savings." i 1 Hanson Place at Flatbush Avenue, opposite L.I.R.R. Depot and Broadway at Driggs Avenue BROOKLYN, N.Y. Open Mondays until 7:00 p.m.

CABANA-Black suede or al with palrnl. Brown suede with tan ralf. Two-inch heel. $8.50 DARIO-Black suede with patent. Two-inch heel.

$7.50 POINSETTIA-Black tuede. Square toe. Two-inrh heeL $7.50 PICO Black or brown suede. Inch-and-one-half heel. $7.50 CUBIST Black uede with patent.

Brown suede with alligator ralf trim. Two-inch heel. $8.50 naui ate. u. a.

ear. off, DiaiON PAT. D1OO4S0 WALKOVER BROOKLYN 565 Fulton St. 946 Flntbush Ave. 7918 Fifth Ave.

MAMIATTAN: 510 Fifth Avenue 1432 Broadway at 40th St. 4251 Broadway, near 181st St, CUBIST.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963